Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

What Blu-Ray did you watch last night?

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Originally posted by Douglas Meltzer View Post
    Ed,

    I re-recorded the Universal 8 Earthquake digest using the Blu-ray audio and screened it at CineSea. We added an additional speaker for the Sensurround bass, however it was only partly successful. I hope to try again, using Midway.

    Walter Matthau did that cameo gratis for the producer Jennings Lang. They had previously worked together on Pete 'n' Tillie and Charlie Varrick.
    Doug, your background on Matthau explains the why he was credited with a name he made up. I had not noticed Matthau until seeing the Bluray (hard to believe that we used to have to put up with 480 resolution on a 19" TV).

    The Sensurround effect on a 5.1 setup was impressive. The second Bluray release (2019) also includes the original 2.1 Sensurround audio track:

    There are three options for this release: a 5.1 DTS-HD Master Audio track (the default option; likely carried over from Universal’s previous Blu-ray release), a 2.1 DTS-HD Master Audio track (which contains and closely replicates the original Sensurround track heard during the film’s crucial earthquake sequences), and a 2.0 DTS-HD Master Audio track. All three tracks showcase strong dialogue and sound effects to go with great fidelity and ambiance to John Williams’ score; of the three, the 5.1 track has the best overall quality while the 2.1 is the most faithful to the original sound mix and the most effective with the Sensurround sound effects. Either way, all three represent the best the movie has ever sounded on home video.

    Comment


    • A few years ago I had on loan the 35mm print of Earthquake the problem was it wasn't until reel four that anything action wise started to happen. I did suggest that I could make an edited version out of it. The owner of the print wanted it back at that point I have it on blu-ray and did watch it a while back, however I did feel that of all the disaster films from the 1970s this one has not dated well.

      Last night and its only the DVD projected using the Panasonic it was "The Ghost and the Darkness" this is one movie I watch every so often, starring Michael Douglas, Val Kilmer, the music by Jerry Goldsmith is brilliant and adds so much to the film, its edge of the seat stuff and hopefully one day we will see it out here released on blu-ray.

      I did take a couple of screen shots of it last night.
      Click image for larger version

Name:	P1390691.jpg
Views:	137
Size:	92.4 KB
ID:	109777
      Click image for larger version

Name:	P1390727.jpg
Views:	134
Size:	109.4 KB
ID:	109778
      Click image for larger version

Name:	P1390732.jpg
Views:	137
Size:	90.6 KB
ID:	109779

      Click image for larger version

Name:	P1390746.jpg
Views:	139
Size:	90.4 KB
ID:	109780
      Click image for larger version

Name:	P1390724.jpg
Views:	140
Size:	123.4 KB
ID:	109781
      Click image for larger version

Name:	P1390741.jpg
Views:	133
Size:	67.9 KB
ID:	109782

      Comment


      • The Ghost and the Darkness is one I missed completely. Looks pretty good. IMDB rating is 6.8 and Rotten Tomatoes awards it with 75% on it's "popcornmeter"

        Click image for larger version

Name:	Verified_Hot_Icon-1.jpg
Views:	118
Size:	41.6 KB
ID:	109787

        Comment


        • Originally posted by Graham Ritchie View Post
          A few years ago I had on loan the 35mm print of Earthquake the problem was it wasn't until reel four that anything action wise started to happen. I did suggest that I could make an edited version out of it. The owner of the print wanted it back at that point I have it on blu-ray and did watch it a while back, however I did feel that of all the disaster films from the 1970s this one has not dated well.
          With the Bluray and Makemkv you could make your own digest. The digest on Super 8 runs 17 minutes.

          Click image for larger version

Name:	image.png
Views:	128
Size:	208.7 KB
ID:	109789
          I wonder which scenes were included in the Universal 8 digest.

          Comment


          • Actually Ed I was thinking about using the Super8 print as a guide. I do no someone with one I might be able to borrow. If I remember right the edited 35mm scope version was going to be about 40 minutes long. I played the blu-ray at the time thinking I want this at the start, this in the middle, this at the end get rid of all that padding was my thinking at the time, but it was not to be

            Anyone here been to the "Chicago Field Museum" to see the man eating lions that the film "The Ghost and the Darkness" is based on?.

            As for Jerry Goldsmith score below link is impressive.
            Click image for larger version

Name:	man eating lions.jpg
Views:	133
Size:	172.9 KB
ID:	109826
            Click image for larger version

Name:	man eating lions-1.jpg
Views:	136
Size:	108.7 KB
ID:	109827


             

            Comment


            • Originally posted by Graham Ritchie View Post
              Actually Ed I was thinking about using the Super8 print as a guide. I do no someone with one I might be able to borrow. If I remember right the edited 35mm scope version was going to be about 40 minutes long. I played the blu-ray at the time thinking I want this at the start, this in the middle, this at the end get rid of all that padding was my thinking at the time, but it was not to be
              Graham, attached below is the subtitles for Earthquake. That can be used to identify the section of the film you want for your digest.

              Example:

              1
              00:00:20,020 --> 00:00:21,430
              (Helicopter whirring)
              2
              00:00:21,430 --> 00:00:23,270
              Narrator: <i>Virtually
              the entire Pacific coast</i>
              3
              00:00:23,270 --> 00:00:27,310
              <i>of our hemisphere rests on
              a series of geologic faults.</i>
              4
              00:00:27,320 --> 00:00:29,020
              <i>One of the most unstable of these</i>
              5
              00:00:29,030 --> 00:00:32,400
              <i>is the San Andreas
              fault, running 600 miles</i>​

              Earthquake 1974 Subtitles.pdf

              Update: I noticed that this is for the TV version which had additional footage added.
              Attached Files
              Last edited by Ed Gordon; December 10, 2024, 02:09 PM. Reason: Update

              Comment


              • Thanks Ed

                I no longer have the 35mm print, my pick of disaster films would have to be 1972 "The Poseidon Adventure" from start to finish its all go both the script and actors are top notch in that one. My second choice is "The Towering Inferno" followed by Airport and Airport 75, both the Super8 edits are very good. I watched Airport 75 just the other night on blu-ray, what stands out is the fact, they used a real aircraft for filming. Sadly many of those Universal 8 have faded which is a real pity. Quite often I don't want to watch the full length but just a mix of digests instead. One more up to date disaster film I never tire of is 2012. The special effects folk seemed to have thrown everything they can think of into it, even the kitchen sink.

                Last night it was the blu-ray of "Cast Away" I always feel sorry for Wilson as he floats away near the end.

                Comment


                • On my travels last week one of the second hand DVDs at Pennylane Records and other stuff, I came across "Under the same Moon" which on the back cover was a official selection for the 2007 Sundance and Toronto film festivals. So thought I would give it a go tonight. It actually turned out to be quite a good movie. If you don't mind English sub-titles, as the language is in Spanish. I projected it using the Panasonic VP, both picture and sound quality are very good.

                  So if you want to watch something a bit different this might be for you.
                  Click image for larger version

Name:	under the same moon.jpg
Views:	127
Size:	89.8 KB
ID:	109889

                  Comment


                  • Originally posted by Graham Ritchie View Post
                    ...I no longer have the 35mm print, my pick of disaster films would have to be 1972 "The Poseidon Adventure" from start to finish its all go both the script and actors are top notch in that one. My second choice is "The Towering Inferno" followed by Airport and Airport 75, both the Super8 edits are very good...
                    My favorites of those mentioned (in order of best first):
                    Airport
                    Towering Inferno
                    Earthquake

                    If we expand the definition of "disaster movie" then Die Hard gets top billing. It is a disaster movie, crime movie, and Christmas movie all-in-one

                    A disaster film or disaster movie is a film genre that has an impending or ongoing disaster as its subject and primary plot device. Such disasters may include natural disasters, accidents, military/terrorist attacks or global catastrophes such as a pandemic. A subgenre of action films, these films usually feature some degree of build-up, the disaster itself, and sometimes the aftermath, usually from the point of view of specific individual characters or their families or portraying the survival tactics of different people.

                    These films often feature large casts of actors and multiple plot lines, focusing on the characters' attempts to avert, escape or cope with the disaster and its aftermath. The genre came to particular prominence during the 1970s with the release of high-profile films such as Airport (1970), followed in quick succession by The Poseidon Adventure (1972), Earthquake (1974) and The Towering Inferno (1974).

                    The casts are generally made up of familiar character actors. Once the disaster begins in the film, the characters are usually confronted with human weaknesses, perhaps falling in love or finding a villain to blame. The films usually feature a persevering hero or heroine (Charlton Heston, Steve McQueen, etc.) called upon to lead the struggle against the threat; in many cases, the "evil" or "selfish" individuals are the first to succumb to the disaster.[4] The genre experienced a renewal in the 1990s boosted by computer-generated imagery and larger studio budgets which allowed for greater spectacle, culminating in the cinematic phenomenon that was James Cameron's Titanic in 1997.
                    Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Disaster_film

                    Comment


                    • I watched the blu-ray of "Cast Away" lately, so if you ever wonder what was in that parcel, that he never opened all that time on the island, and at the end of the film he delivered it as we never saw in the film what was in it, well all can be revealed now in this below video
                       

                      Comment


                      • Now he needs to apologize to Wilson for screwing up so badly.

                        Comment


                        • Two nights ago on blu-ray "Those Magnificent Men In Their Flying Machines" this was a import from Germany and its excellent. Shot in Todd AO the screen ratio on the blu-ray is 2.20:1 a nice ratio for my screen, it fills it right up sound is English 5:1, what a cast.

                          Last night and something this time a bit different, after watching the excellent Super 8 Derann print of "Holiday Camp" that gave me the idea to watch this one below. Its out on blu-ray but don't have it at the moment, but do have the DVD so projected it using the Panasonic VP. "Holiday On The Buses" came out way back in 1973. This below scene is when Stan is in a hurry to drive the bus back and takes a short cut. Its typical British humor all the way.
                           

                          Comment


                          • Watched the blu-ray of the "Peter Pan 2003". Of all the Peter Pan films, including Hook and Disney, this one I consider the best screen version. One thing I do remember was, that when we ran the 35mm print at the cinema it was one of the best quality prints I had put together. The music, the cast, and special effects all looked great. I still have the flat trailer on 35mm however the Scope Super 8 trailer of this film I got from Derann in the Scope format is excellent.

                            Anyway, rather than include the trailer here, I thought I would include instead "Jason Isaacs" home move instead...enjoy.

                            Blu-ray picture and sound quality is one of the best transfers I have projected using the Panasonic VP.
                            Click image for larger version

Name:	P1220761.jpg
Views:	63
Size:	144.6 KB
ID:	110184
                            Click image for larger version

Name:	P1220762.jpg
Views:	63
Size:	249.6 KB
ID:	110185

                             

                            Comment


                            • Just reading that actor Richard Briers passed away in 2013 this scene with him and that parrot in the above 2003 film is brilliant. Who remembers the BBC series from the 1970s called The Good Life?, it was very popular out here in NZ at the time. One DVD I had watched lately with Richard Briers in it as the poor house buyer in the 1965 comedy was "A Home Of Your Own" you can see it in full on you-tube from a blu-ray source.
                              Click image for larger version

Name:	p506097_b_v8_ad.jpg
Views:	59
Size:	75.9 KB
ID:	110206
                              Anyway back to Peter Pan and that parrot

                               

                              Comment


                              • Watched the blu-ray of "Plane" two nights ago good movie with lots of action.
                                 

                                Comment

                                Working...
                                X